File photo from a teacher's rally earlier this year with smiles renewed since yesterday as ...
A tentative agreement has been reached between the Washoe County School District and the Washoe Education Association for a tentative two-year collective bargaining agreement to run until the end of June 2025, with a 20 percent cost of living adjustment over the next two years.
The money will come from state funding and cost shifts within the district.
“I am grateful to our district and WEA negotiation teams for the time they put into reaching this agreement. I am more confident than ever that WCSD is a district on the rise,” Superintendent Susan Enfield said.
“Since my arrival in Washoe County, I have been clear that our dedicated and hardworking educators are deserving of compensation that reflects their professionalism and expertise,” a statement she released yesterday indicated.
“We were determined to take massive strides forward and believe this contract does just that,” WEA President Calen Evans said.
The tentative deal includes a one-time $5,000 signing and/or retention bonus for certain hard-to-fill positions such as for special education.
Educators expressed satisfaction on various social media posts, several of them saying the big raise was thanks to labor union power.
The agreement is now under consideration with WEA members for their ratification before going to the Board of Trustees for a final approval.
A previous deal was reached earlier this month with the Washoe Education Support Professionals, which includes librarians, teacher assistants, special education teacher aides, secretaries and nutrition services.
Our Town Reno reporting, September 2023
Police Check in at the Jacobs Entertainment Bought Out Desert Rose Inn
Police checked in at the Jacobs Entertainment bought out Desert Rose Inn today, while security guards milled around, and a dog looked sadly out the window of a back room.
Roses were in bloom at the motel which had previously resisted purchase overtures. In recent months, residents there had complained of the noise from the Glow Plaza from across the street, with more and more events taking place.
The desk manager at the motel confirmed a Downtown Makeover report indicating former policeman Jim McAllister has sold the Desert Rose Inn after five plus years of resisting offers from Jacobs Entertainment.
Downtown Makeover said documents indicate the sale to Jacobs Entertainment is at a price of over $10 million.
The desk manager told us she was now worried about whether all the low income residents there, many of them seniors, would get relocation help as has been reported but never verified following previous motel purchases and subsequent destructions along Fourth Street by the Colorado-based company.
Another bought out motel complex nearby, formerly the Crest Inn, was converted into the Renova Flats, with studios going for above $1,000, while others were leveled, becoming fenced off dirt.
Our Town Reno reporting, September 18, 2023
Immigrants of Reno: Miya Hannan, Expanding Views of Death in Her Art
Miya Hannan is an artist with countless stories to share, with the most recent ones involving her journey to Reno, first as an associate professor at UNR, and now also as the Graduate Director of the Master of Fine Arts program.
Her art has been displayed from coast to coast in the US, as well as internationally. Everywhere she goes, she finds that humans have unique responses to her work. Some are grateful, and some just don’t know what to say. That’s because the subject of much of Miya’s work is death.
On top of mentoring and educating other artists, Miya stays busy producing her own sculptures, drawings, and installations. I sat with her recently under a shady tree at a local coffee shop, where I had the honor of learning more about the story behind her artwork.
Miya has lived in Reno for the past seven years, and before that she was a California resident. Originally, however, Miya is from Japan. “I came to the United States just to learn English. And I was learning English, but they told me that I had to have a major. I wasn't sure what to do, but…I did like–you know, drawing, and making sculptures. So I just took one drawing class. That changed my life.”
While still living in Japan, and before her career started as an artist, Miya worked in hospitals and emergency rooms as a medical professional. “I worked for a hospital for seven years. You do have to face a lot of death,” she says. “And if you work for a hospital, you have to have a good understanding of death. (Some) will say that people who work for a hospital tend to develop their own philosophy, or their own poetic view, about death. (We) have to somehow develop (our) own understanding, to be okay every day.”
Many people think of science and art as two very different fields of study, but Miya doesn’t see it that way. I asked her how her view of science and medicine intersects with her art, and she told me that, for her, “science and art are the same thing.” If you experience Miya’s art, you might agree. “Both (science and art) are just trying to understand the world,” she says. “And they talk about the same thing. I can talk about the same thing using art language, versus scientific (language).”
In some of her sculptures, Miya has used phone books and plaster to create bone-like structures jutting out of fabric. This creates an image of spinal cords, intertwined with roots, laid across a white earth. In other works, Miya has used bone ash– and she’s often asked where she acquires it. “Bone ash is easy,” she says, “because it's one of the ceramic materials…so if you go to a ceramic store, you can easily get bone ash.”
The use of these materials signifies death, but it goes much deeper than that for her. “Bone ash is very important culturally– for my culture, because we cremate the body,” she told me. “98% of Japanese cremate their bodies…In the funeral, we are the ones who pick up the bones– all the relatives have to pick up the bones, the remains, and put them in a container. So we have a whole ritual around bone ash. We really respect bone ash as our ancestor’s reminder.”
Miya’s work can be used as a vessel for conversation. But in the US, and western culture, the topic of death is often considered taboo. “I always get criticism from people, ‘what if they don’t understand Asian culture?’” Miya recounts. “I’m not really expecting them to understand how Asians think about death. I first want them to understand…the idea with this is based on the individual. Even if you grew up in the same house– your brother, your mom, dad– (they) all may have a different idea about how they want to die, and how they think about death–it’s completely individual.”
This disparity in cultural views and expectations has created challenges for those who immigrate to the US, or for those who were raised with different rituals and beliefs. “For example,” Miya says, “Asians really believe in cremation and reincarnation and such. But western doctors don’t understand that, when (Asian people) die. Or in the crematory- ‘no no no you can’t even touch bones!’ We have to follow what the western doctors think about death. In hospitals, some Asians have a very uncomfortable time, because their philosophies are very different.”
This is part of why Miya creates the art that she does. She wants to expand our collective view of the meaning of death– and life that precedes it. “I want people to have a moment to think about (their) own fate…what they want, and how they think about death, you know. I just try to give a chance for that. We can’t avoid (death). I have so many people that have a problem because they don’t want to talk about it, because they deny it…but nobody can avoid it. And I think denial actually causes more trouble to people.”
I asked Miya about how her work has been received here in Reno, Nevada. She recalled previous cities where her art has been on display. In Richmond, Virginia, she was surprised by the audience’s acceptance. “They actually had the best reaction,” she told me. “I was afraid because that’s a city (with history of) the Civil War …so will they really take this well?” She wondered. “But it was the opposite. That’s why they really understood (the need to) think about death.” In California, Miya says crowd reactions were “half and half.” She remembers a professor who told her, “‘Miya, California is a place that people come to forget about Asian (culture), and dying.’”
Here in Reno, Miya had “no clue” how things would go for her, and how locals would view her work. “There aren’t too many Asians here. (With) such Asian oriented work, you know, how are people going to see my artwork?” For artists looking to introduce concepts to a diverse group of people, coming from many different backgrounds, of course this is a challenge. After some thought, though, she remembered: “I had a good comment from Indigenous people, because they are also nature-oriented. Their philosophy has a similarity to Asian philosophy… some indigenous artists– people, came to me and said, ‘I really understand what you’re talking about.’”
So, what has Miya been working on recently? A couple of summers ago, she had an artist residency in Montana, where she stumbled across a cemetery that housed about 100 tombstones bearing Japanese names. “It was a complete accident,” she told me.
“Nobody knew why they were there. They all died around the same period of time, they were all young. They all died in their early 30s, late 20s, some of them younger. So I got really curious about this, and after digging into a little bit of the history, it turns out they were Japanese railroad workers, who came across the ocean to work construction.”
Miya found both connection and inspiration in this cemetery in Montana. “There’s a lot of questions that came to me…is there anything I can do for these people? All I could think was, as an immigrant myself, to remember what they did for us. And to think about them crossing the ocean to have a better life…that’s what I did myself. So I had a, sort of, deep connection. I felt like– ok, somebody should be doing this job. While researching it, I can make artwork that remembers and honors them. I have this project–I’m doing this installation and making drawings and sculptures for them.”
As a renowned artist, Miya has the platform to honor the memory of these otherwise forgotten Japanese railroad workers. But she’s doing even more than that, as part of her current sabbatical, taking her back to Japan, where she will keep working on this project.
“I’m going back to their hometown, to collect soil…and bring back their soil to their tombstones. That’s my project for this fall. Because they wanted to go home, but they never could. Everybody wants to go home when they die…very much so for the Japanese. So, this is my own appreciation for them.”
Miya not only wants to encourage conversations around death, but she models important ways to honor death, as well.
One of her current projects, Patria Soli, delivers homeland soil to those who are not able to return to the place that they call home. “Soil became one of my very important materials,” Miya says. “Part of my philosophy is that all of human history is somehow recorded in the soil. People walk in the same spot, and the land remembers who was there.”
So, let’s talk about death. And let’s talk about life, and history, and tradition, and different cultures as it comes to death as well. Miya Hannan is seeking to curate these conversations, and perhaps we as a society–as humans– should start to think about it much more.
Our Town Reno reporting and top photo by Ray Grosser
Wrightway Market Fails to Get Its Alcohol License Back
The Wrightway Market across from the downtown bus station failed Wednesday in its appeal to have its previously revoked license restored to sell packaged alcohol.
In a summary email, the City of Reno wrote: “City staff originally determined that the mentioned alcohol sales are not compatible with the nearby transit station and the adjacent substance abuse facility. The administrator argued the sale of package beer and wine at this location has had a negative impact on public health and safety.”
The operators of Wrightway Market said they are facing “hard times” due to the City’s decision to revoke its license initially based on “false data,” by making the corner store a landmark for police calls in the area.
They said they were losing $30,000 a month since not having the privileged license renewed.
They showed several videos of police and ambulances coming by the store in matters unrelated to their clients, but said these calls were repeatedly marked as related to Wrightway Market activities.
Councilwoman Jenny Brekhus disputed how city staff approached their analysis to deny the application, calling it a “continued story of targeting.”
Councilwoman Meghan Ebert also wasn’t convinced city staff were being fair in their assessment.
“It’s important we help businesses,” Ebert said, with vacant buildings all around the corner store. “I’m concerned about creating food deserts downtown as they do sell other items, groceries, things like that. If they were to go out of business, I’m not sure where people would go buy groceries.”
“Bad people are still there,” Opinder Dhillon said despite his liquor license having not been renewed previously. “Please, please, give me six months. I’ll come back and if you see any problem, [as] it’s a privileged license, take it away.”
Ebert and Brekhus agreed but a majority of the council didn’t.
Our Town Reno reporting September 2023
Rebel and Lori Preferring the Senior Center over the Cares Campus
Merv Haak and Lorinda have it rough, but at least they say right now they have each other. And they love spending time at the Washoe County Senior Center on the corner of 9th street and Sutro. They consider themselves part of a growing group of Cares campus escapees.
Haak, 68, who goes by Rebel, and Lorinda who goes by Lori much prefer to hang out outside the Senior Center rather than the big compound set up to help the unhoused near 4th street.
Their challenges are still plenty. Lori can barely stand up straight and relies on a wheelchair, suffering from lupus. Haak can barely open his hands, having had metal implanted in both.
Unlike the Cares Campus, the Senior Center is only open weekdays and there’s no shelter here. “The rest of the time you just fend for yourself, but that’s fine,” Haak said.
He previously had a job in security but says he got fired for being homeless. He says his Social Security payments of about $900 a month aren’t enough for them to afford anything in town.
He used to live in a van near WinCo, then tried the Cares Campus and now just wants to be independent, as best he can.
Word has gone around that the Senior Center offers a more relaxed experience for the unhoused seeking community, shaded areas and a free lunch, with some of their friends also setting up on the sidewalk, with grocery carts full of their possessions, worrying some neighbors and local politicians.
“They're quite kind and polite to everybody,” Lori said of the Senior Center staff. “One of the workers even gave me a blanket to sleep with and a change of clothes.”
“The staff here unlike the Cares Campus they’re kind and polite, and you meet nice people here, and people want to talk, and not feel like you are all crammed in a prison or a warehouse,” Haak said comparing the two places. The Nevada Cares Campus has been building out its next phases of having more on site services and supportive housing, but many still feel unsafe there.
Lori said she felt looked down upon there as a disabled woman in a wheelchair, and got depressed, while staying at the compound, and doesn’t want to go back, whatever future changes there might be.
“I became a cutter again after 10, 15 years. They treat you so bad. Cares campus needs to be shut down,” she said.
She said they should have more games, activities, and even an art corner to make people feel more welcome, but that doesn’t seem to be the aim.
Rebel and Lori fear that as more and more people avoid the Cares campus, and gravitate outside the Senior Center, sadly new forthcoming rules and protocols will make it less welcoming to the unhoused and the disabled as well.
At the most recent homelessness advisory board meeting this week, County Commissioner Alexis Hill announced publicly that security will soon be added at the Senior Center.
Why people don’t feel safe at the Cares Campus was also brought up at Monday’s meeting, with indications of future plans for a specific space for vulnerable people there.
There’s also the reality that some people including seniors have been “86ed” or permanently banned.
County spokeswoman Bethany Drysdale this week wrote that: “As of Friday, there were 37 individuals who have been placed on a permanent sit-out. That total includes all permanent sit-outs dating back to October 1, 2021. Per the 11/4/2022 NCC policy, the following behaviors will result in a permanent sit-out: Assault and or battery with a weapon, Sexual assault, Possession of a firearm, Sale of illegal drugs, or related paraphernalia, Intentionally setting a fire, Recruitment of others into sex trafficking. Of the 37 current permanent sit-outs, common reasons include drug or sex trafficking, physical assault with a weapon, arson, and significant threats of harm to/stalking staff that resulted in a TPO or arrest. A NCC participant has a right to file an appeal regarding their sit-out of any length, including a permanent sit-out. The individual can approach the security gate at the NCC entrance and request an appeal form, fill it out, and submit it to NCC staff. NCC administrative staff have three days to respond to the appeal. There have been five individuals who appealed a permanent sit-out, the appeal was granted, and they are now allowed back on campus.”
Drysdale also wrote back about concerns that seniors with serious health challenges are not able to stay at the Nevada Cares Campus either, based on a policy there called “Activities of Daily Living”:
“NCC participants must be ambulatory enough to get in and out of their bed on their own and independently take care of activities of daily living (ADL), such as feeding themselves, hygiene, and bathroom needs. The NCC Intake and Diversion staff are required to complete an assessment regarding an individual’s ability to complete their ADLs every time the individual requests a bed at the shelter. If the person is unable to complete their ADLs, the staff attempt to assist diverting the individual to another appropriate location. NCC contracted operator staff are not trained to assist with personal care,” the policy reads.
Our Town Reno reporting, September 2023
Pleas by Advocates to Plan for Cold Weather Help for the Unhoused are Not Acted Upon
“We hope to see some results by October 1st,” Natalie Handler said as public comments closed earlier today, before reappointed chair of the Community Homelessness Advisory Board Alexis Hill called it a “great” meeting.
Several long term advocates for the unhoused pleaded for the Record Street community center to be reopened as a shelter for women and families, and for plans to open a multitude of 24/7 warming centers across the region before colder weather kicks in.
“We’re basically asking for proactive movement that will save lives,” Jake Maynard said. “We’re worried about winter and a lack of preparedness,” Ilya Arbatman said. “It’s a life or death situation,” Tara Tran said.
When questioned by appointed Reno councilwoman Kathleen Taylor, who was chosen as the board’s vice chair, Monica Cochran from the city of Reno said the Record street location was not “turnkey” at the moment, with a faulty elevator and leaky roof, with repairs which could cost in the millions of dollars.
Handler later wondered why several dozen veterans had recently been staying there, and wanted an actual assessment of what repairs would cost. Bill Simms said he was disappointed at the lack of urgency for getting that location operational again, with the Our Place shelter for women and families usually full.
In terms of the warming center, Taylor seemed content with the one at the Nevada Cares Campus scheduled to open in November.
Handler said efforts should be made to have more of these warming centers, including creating partnerships with faith communities and businesses owning underutilized spaces, with incentives added to help vulnerable citizens.
Lilith Baran said it was “time to take some of the kids gloves off,” and wondered why someone with lived experience wasn’t on the board as was previously discussed. She and others lamented the fact the board no longer meets monthly as it used to, with recent accounts of people overdosing in different locations and dying on the streets of Reno.
There were discussions about the Senior Center and how more unhoused people are gravitating there, prompting Dana Searcy, now the “Division Director of Housing and Homeless Services” to say there are ongoing discussions to create a new section for vulnerable people at the Cares Campus.
She said the group of unhoused seniors is growing in the region, posing new challenges.
Maynard wondered why there wasn’t a bus giving people staying at the Cares Campus an opportunity to travel to the board meeting and testify to their experiences themselves, while Sparks Mayor Ed Lawson repeatedly called the compound a “beacon of hope.”
“Not good enough,” Dani DeRosa said at the end of the first phase of public comments.
Advocates said the number which matters the most is the number of people dying on the streets of northern Nevada because they are poor and unhoused.
Our Town Reno reporting September 2023
Amber Howell Pushed out from County, While Dana Searcy Gets Expanded Role
Several staff we spoke to today within the Washoe County social services infrastructure say they are confused by all the changes happening in their leadership, including the recent departure of Amber Howell, previously director of the Human Services Agency.
In an email sent today, Washoe County announced “staffing and structural changes happening with two of its public-facing departments, the Registrar of Voters Office (ROV) and the Human Services Agency (HSA). “
The news release said Dana Searcy’s position “will transition from the Office of the County Manager to become a new division within the Human Services Agency (HSA). “
A picture of Searcy listed her as Division Director of Housing and Homeless Services.
It did not mention Howell who apparently resigned under pressure this past summer after several complaints were made against her.
Howell declined an interview with Our Town Reno, saying there was an ongoing legal matter and that her attorney advised her not to discuss her predicament at this point.
Bethany Drysdale a spokeswoman for the County wrote back after this report initially came out indicating: “Amber resigned and an interim director was appointed at a Board of County Commissioners meeting. That is the standard procedure when a department director resigns.”
County Commissioner Mike Clark told Our Town Reno he “finds out about these things after the fact,” when asked about the restructuring. “I don't think the county was, well, they weren't transparent with me. Let's just put it that way.”
More specifically, concerning Howell he said, “it has the appearance that they made her life so uncomfortable that she resigned. She, you know, she was a long time employee of the county. I'm sure she had aspirations of retiring from the county, but for whatever reason, the county decided to put some undue pressure on her,” he alleged.
Clark has previously complained about the offices where Searcy does her work, above the La Famiglia restaurant in downtown Reno, far from the Cares Campus.
“As a former assessor, I look at buildings and improvements differently… When I look at something, I'm going to guesstimate the value,” Clark told us about his ongoing concerns about Searcy’s offices. “And, that's a palatial palace, let's just put it that way. I've been in every single county office in every county in the state over the years, and most every county office here in Washoe County. And it's like nothing you've ever seen. You should ask for a tour of it,” he said, calling Searcy the “darling of the manager’s office”.
“I look at that and I think all the money spent here could have probably been used better, spreading money around amongst the citizens,” he said. “The health department, they're crammed in there like in a hamster cage, and they've got literally no room to move. And then we've got another office down the street that's palatial. I want to know why.”
The county described Searcy’s expanded role as “a natural progression to harmonize the delivery of services across our homeless facilities, which include Our Place, the Cares Campus and our Safe Camp. HHS’s move will provide economies of scale for much-needed resources and collaboration opportunities as we pursue our mission to end homelessness and expand affordable housing in our region.”
Our Town Reno reporting September 2023
Chance Marshall Ramos, A Self Proclaimed "Bearded Lady" Surviving Through Art
Chance Marshall Ramos has been doing art since like most artists say, they could hold a pencil. Her main inspirations are fantasy themed and she loves to experiment in many different mediums.
More recently she’s turned to art as a way to heal and vent from her many chronic illnesses.
Ramos sufferers from polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), Klippel-Feil syndrome, and small fiber neuropathy. The worst case scenario for Ramos is she could end up full body or partially paralyzed. Ramos was also diagnosed with five different mental illnesses this year.
Her illnesses have been accompanied by shame she’s had to overcome.
“When I was 19 I was in full PCOS which caused my testosterone to flare up, now I know it’s literally my brain unable to produce hormones properly,” she said. “As a result that activated hair follicles in my face which started growing facial hair, for many years, I tried to hide it, I was ashamed of it.”
She remembers how her mother was the first person who made her feel uncomfortable with her own body. “When it started to grow in my mother who used to be a former model- We were waiting for the tram at Disneyland and she goes what is this? Girls don't grow facial hair and ripped it out of my face,” Ramos says.
However, none of this has stopped Ramos from following her passion to create or from being a mother. Ramos started her business May I Art in 2019 and since the beginning of her art business journey, she’s advertised herself as a bearded lady. Ramos was able to take her condition and embrace it and make it a staple of her unique image as an artist. “Hey, have you ever talked to a bearded lady?” is an icebreaker Ramos would use often because it makes people stop and question if what they just heard was correct.
“You don’t even have to pay circus prices, come on in,” Ramos says. She often uses signage with similar phrases to attract customers to her booth at events.
Ramos and her family live in Silver Springs but she can always be found at any art show or event vending her designs in Fallon, Virginia City, Carson City, Sparks, and of course Reno.
Ramos' daughter Persephone (a Covid baby) is an artist who is in training and very much likes to follow in her mom’s footsteps. Ramos purchases yearly sketchbooks and archives them at the end of the year along with hers. Ramos also likes to spread the gift of art to others. If Ramos happens to not like a certain medium like gouache or watercolor, she will give it away. Just like she did recently with some paints to neighborhood kids.
Since the birth of her daughter, Ramos works on her art during nap time. She is dedicated full-time to her art and her daughter as well as maintaining her home. For Ramos taking advantage of every second she isn’t tending to Persephone or the house is important. Since she also has a Patreon she needs to send stuff out every month.
One of Ramo’s staples for vending is these sticker collections which feature different art pieces and themes of bigger art she’s made.
”There are hard days when I can't even hold a pencil, or I can’t look left or right. I have to accept that I'm losing a lot of my independence,” says Ramos. Her Patreon members got her a 20-inch tablet so she wouldn’t have to hunch over and so it makes it easer for her to produce her art. “As my help gets more progressive they wanted me to have access to easier stuff and more mediums,” says Ramos.
As of now Ramos is working on her very own comic and possibly putting it into professional print, while trying to sell more art to be able to fix her AC unit.
Our Town Reno reporting by Nancy Vazquez
Reno OBGYN Samuel Chacon Suspended
The Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners has suspended the license for Reno OBGYN Dr. Samuel Chacon, effective immediately, saying he put the “health, safety and welfare of the public at risk of imminent harm.”
Chacon had continued to work at the Women’s Health Center of Reno on W Plumb Lane, despite mounting allegations against him.
Chacon who has faced a litany of complaints had previously surrendered his hospital privileges and was arrested as part of a prostitution sting last year.
The Nevada Coalition to End Domestic and Sexual Violence has accused him of performing unnecessary surgeries and of botching operations. There are also several medical cases being investigated against him.
A hearing is being scheduled for Oct 12th to decide whether the suspension will be extended and for how long.
Lawyers representing Chacon or his office have not responded to media requests for comment.
Our Town Reno reporting September 2023
Alex, On the Streets after a Sudden Breakup, an Early Retirement During Covid and Drinking
My name is Alex. I’m originally from Brooklyn, New York.
I was born in New York. I grew up with Italians. My mom and dad were born in Puerto Rico. I've traveled there many times. I used to spend my summers there. My grandparents didn't want me in the streets of New York during the summer. Puerto Rico taught me a lot. I learned about our agriculture there and my origins. I think that Puerto Rico today is a wonderful retirement country, but I would always say, like anywhere else, you should have a plan before you retire.
I always wanted to be a Yankee baseball player. Sports was always one of my passions. But then a woman took my heart and I threw away the bat and ball and … I became a dad at 14. It's hard because you can't leave them with babysitters until they're at least three or four. And then the second one was coming along.
Then, I went into the Army, just after high school. I just knew I had to do something because during high school, we were doing things we shouldn't have done. And, you know, always asking for our mom to write an excuse, ‘cause we missed so many days.
I was still of out of control... A lot of people that have been in the military before look back at their time and like kind of reminisce of who they were before they joined the military. 'cause it changes you as a person. The plan is that we learn discipline. Discipline is needed in any manner, whether it be war, whether it be against the enemy, whether it be with a friend or foe. Discipline teaches self-respect, responsibility, and the fact that, if we're going to be a strong nation, we have to protect one another. So there we are. Discipline was something that I lacked when I was a youngster. I thought I had all the answers back then, but if I could do it all again, I'd do it differently.
I'm the oldest of six and I buried two brothers and three sisters. My goodness. My two brothers died of heroin overdose. My sister Susie, she had a hysterectomy that went bad a few months later. And then my youngest baby sister, she hung herself.
And then mom and grandma outlived them all. Grandma buried them all. She was a strong woman. Puerto Rican women are real strong. She was the glue to the whole family. We couldn't do nothing without her. But, then when she left us, that's it. There was nothing else.
Now, I have four kids of my own. I have three wonderful daughters, and I have a great handsome son. They're in Massachusetts as we speak. I'm really proud of them, contrary to how they feel about me. I've made some bad choices. I've made a lot of mistakes in my life for which I've learned, never to do again. I left New York right after 9/11… And, here we are in a wonderful state of Nevada.
How I got to Reno? In short I wanted to see Elvis, but I got here too late. I went to Vegas, got a job. The weather's better. My arthritis was betraying me. So I wanted warmer weather.
And, in my aging process, I thought that I wanted to start a bucket list. And there was a lot of things I didn't get to do in New York, which I can do now in warmer weather… like bungee jumping and rafting, those things we just didn't do in New York.
I’ve been in Reno 18 years now. And it's been an adventure. There's been a lot of remodeling. I’ve seen the phases and the changes. It is the smallest little city in the world, but it has a big heart.
The population has almost doubled since I've been here. It has its flaws, you know, like every city, but it's a wonderful city. Tourists are always welcome. It's a wonderful place to live. There’s lots of work here.
I’m actually retired. I'm 62 waiting on my first retirement check. I worked 17 years for FedEx. I was a driver. All of a sudden when the Covid hit … people were panicking and buying hundreds pounds of toilet paper.
So I couldn't make the 20. I got to 17 and said, I gotta let go. But otherwise, here we are in this wonderful city. The weather's always unpredictable. You think it's gonna be cold and it'll be hot and vice versa… So if you don't like the weather, just wait a minute.
Unfortunately, I had a fallout with a significant other who chose to go elsewhere, and she gave her heart to someone else. I wasn't doing well with the breakup. And, I started looking at the bottom of a bottle and turned around and she abandoned an apartment that we were both sharing for 13 years.
I have no plans to go back to New York. I remember why I left. It was overpopulated, too expensive, the winters almost seem like they last about eight to nine months. When it's cold, it's cold. And I like smaller towns, smaller cities, and this is this where I belong.
Where do I sleep at night?
Well, you know that’s almost like that's a question I would only answer to the Secret Service.
There are a lot of organizations here that are helping the needy, whether it be with food, health, mental, and or funds. And, you know, if you knock on the right doors and if you present yourself and under the proper circumstances, if time and funds allow, they will help you.
They'll give you addresses, they'll give you phone numbers. And quite frankly, they'll even give you a bus pass if you have no transportation. So what they don't have, they'll see to it that somebody will, they'll know how to send you in the direction of somebody that will have whatever needs you have.
You have to want to get help though.
So where I sleep, it all depends on how tired I am. And at what point did I get tired? I could sleep on a park bench waiting for a bus and find that I never got on that bus.
And it's two days later and there I am still sitting on that bench.
We all have tragic trauma. We all have a story.
Our Town Reno Interview by Aimee Arellano
Washoe County Teachers Still Without a Contract, Sought out Pay Raise Weeks Into New School Year
One of our favorite protests to cover for Our Town Reno was the February 11th 2023 teacher’s rally for better pay and working conditions.
Despite this large protest, with hundreds attending in rainy conditions, several weeks into this 2023-24 school year, teachers, as well as principals and school psychologists, are currently still working on an expired contract. Negotiations are ongoing, with the amount for teacher pay raises a main sticking point.
This week, Washoe Education Association President Calen Evans released this statement on the group’s Facebook page:
“We met with the district’s team for nearly 10 hours yesterday as we work to come to an agreement on our contract. While we made some very positive gains in areas there are still some crucial components on which we do not agree.
While there are many things, we all agree on and fully support, there are some fundamental differences in how we view what makes an effective education system and how to best improve learning outcomes for students. There is also a difference of opinion on where we believe money should be placed and how to best attract and retain highly qualified educators. These differences do not mean we don’t want the same outcomes, we just have differences in how to get there and it is leading to our inability to come to an agreement.
Finally, we are running into some obstacles around the projected cost of certain items and projections for certain expenses, which is leading to difficulty in agreeing to a finalized compensation package.
To be clear, these differences and hurdles do not mean that our district doesn’t support our efforts. Just because we don’t all agree on everything, that doesn’t mean we don’t ultimately want the same outcomes. We believe in our superintendent and her leadership and strongly support our board of trustees.
With that being said, we are strong in our resolve to provide our unit with a contract that we feel reflects the FULL value we know our district can provide. Our priority is to come to this agreement collaboratively, but we still are not to a point that we feel we have maximized the value of this contract. Our hope is that our district's team, through directives from our superintendent and board of trustees, continue to be more aggressive and creative with its budget to support our educators. We are hopeful that through collaboration and a strong drive from both sides that we’ll be able to push this over the finish line quickly. “
Teacher retention has been challenging in recent years due to pay not adequately covering rising costs of living and still extremely large class sizes, despite efforts to reduce these and have co-teaching arrangements. New teachers have been hired but with a starting salary of about $41,000 per year, many leave the profession quickly.
Another bargaining group The Association of Professional and Technical Administrators, the union that includes school psychologists, previously filed a complaint with Nevada’s Government Employee Management Relations Board accusing the district of delaying negotiations for the new contract.
The President of the Washoe Schools Principals Association Colbee Riordan has said starting the school year without a contract has made it difficult to hire for key positions.
Washoe County School Superintendent Susan Enfield, who took on the job in July 2022, has said she is committed to resolving the contract situation with all concerned bargaining groups. She has said she considers $65,000 a more adequate starting salary for a teacher.
Our Town Reno reporting, Labor Day 2023
Beleaguered Nevada Humane Society Now Seeks to Squash Unionizing Effort
On the Friday before Labor Day, employees at the Nevada Humane Society say they received an email from management urging them not to form a union.
The “information sheet No. 1” was sent as employees from Reno and Carson City are trying to convince others to unionize ahead of planned Sep. 29 union elections, citing low pay, chronic understaffing and a myriad of other problems.
In mid-August, employees filed a petition with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and informed the Nevada Humane Society of their intent to organize.
We contacted the Nevada Humane Society about these developments but received no immediate response to our query.
In an all-staff email shared with Our Town Reno, the explainer sheet sent by the systemmessage@paycomonline.com address indicates the Nevada Humane Society “does not support unionization,” and “does not believe that unionizing is in the best interest of our employees or our animals.”
The 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated to providing local animals with permanent homes has been riddled with problems in recent years, and recently appointed a new CEO Jerleen Bryant.
One current worker told Our Town Reno anonymously that the majority of policy changes implemented by Bryant have been like “a new coat of paint on a car that is rotted on the inside,” alleging that employee needs and concerns continue to be ignored under her leadership.
Other NHS employees, who also asked to remain anonymous, say recent changes, including Bryant’s hiring, who was made interim CEO in May and then given the permanent role in July, have failed to address the high staff turnover and chronic understaffing that they say prevents their shelters from providing an appropriate level of care.
This despite NHS receiving millions of dollars in grant funding every year, with the last reported total being about $8 million in grants and contributions in fiscal year 2021.
In recent days, NHS has been reaching out to local media and asking for help on their own social media, asking for donations to help replenish their pet food assistance program.
Workers told us that when their centers are unable to receive and care for enough animals because of low staffing, the burden falls on animal services departments of Washoe and Douglas County Sheriff's departments, which unlike the NHS are not “no kill” shelters and do not provide pet adoption services.
Since taking over, Bryant has said she is committed to keeping NHS a no-kill facility. She’s also indicated she has plans to open the NHS dog adoption floors back up to the public, after operating on a per appointment basis only.
Complaint letters from workers concerning former CEO Greg Hall who resigned in May included allegations of mismanagement, retaliatory actions against staff, lack of training, and excessive euthanasia and drugging of dogs. Hall denied the allegations before stepping down.
Employees who spoke to Our Town Reno say the main priority in forming a union is to secure better pay for shelter employees and guaranteed minimum staffing, along with the creation of a committee for animal care which would give day-to-day workers a voice in overall decision-making.
If successful, the election will authorize the newly-formed Northern Nevada Animal Labor Union to represent the workers at the Humane Society’s Reno and Carson City locations.
Our Town Reno reporting by Andrew Zuker
What's That Construction Project? Two Converted Motel 6s
Two former Motel 6s at the intersection of Plumb Lane and Virginia Street and on Stardust Street have been turned into Plato’s Midtown and Plato’s West University, with new paint jobs, updated pools, landscaping, new appliances including burner cooktops, AC units, flooring and bedding inside the rooms.
It’s very much like rebranded long term motel living but with more money needed upfront with “onsite laundry, a secured mail and package room, 24/7 emergency maintenance, and an all-inclusive utility fee that eliminates the need for managing multiple accounts and saves you money on utilities like internet and Wi-Fi.”
The Wifi though is now listed at an extra $95 a month.
200 square feet studios go for $1,099, with small dogs and cats accepted.
In a press release from last summer, announcing the purchases of the two motels, Michigan-based Repvblik LLC called itself “the nationwide leader in privately funded marketplace solutions to create workforce, student, and senior housing through adaptive reuse of distressed real estate.”
In total it said there would be 239 housing units.
"Many of our service workers are in a tough spot because their salary is not enough to qualify for a mortgage, but yet they make too much to qualify for financial assistance,” Mayor Hillary Schieve was quoted as saying in the press release at the time. “More workforce housing will allow us to fill that gap. We want these folks to be able to live in the same city they work, and not have affordability be a barrier to that.
The reviews are just starting, with Kelli Charles giving five stars to both locations and Tammy Foulks giving just one star to the Midtown location.
Our Town Reno reporting, August 2023
William Platt, A Long Standing Local Dentist Eases Into Retirement
Soon, local dentist William Platt will be putting in his last fillings and placing his last crowns at Evergreen Family Dental, after decades of treating patients their entire lives, and then some of their own kids into adulthood.
“I feel good about all the years I practiced,” he says. “And I think it's the one job where I could work so hard and actually enjoyed it because it was hard work. I started my practice from nothing. It was just me,” he remembers.
After graduating from Wooster High and then zoology at UNR, he made the decision to go study in San Francisco. Originally he had hopes of becoming a veterinarian, and then a lawyer, but after talking to one of his brother's friends who was a lawyer, he got a suggestion of becoming a dentist instead and from that moment he went for it.
After graduating with honors from the University of Pacific Dental School in San Francisco, he returned to Reno, set with his career choice.
Starting a dentist’s office from scratch, he initially did everything on his own, from answering calls, to scheduling patients and even keeping the books.
Looking back at all the years he's practiced he says is happy with the work he has done and is starting to look forward to retirement.
He looks forward to exploring new places with his wife and close friends and to getting to do more of his hobbies, like float-tube fly fishing.
Most of his and his wife's close friends are actually people that started off as patients.
“That's probably our closest group of friends is from patient's originally in the office,” he said.
He has patients that he started seeing as children and now he sees their adult children. Making himself accessible throughout the years is the reason he feels he has had such loyal patients. He recalls coming into the office after hours and on weekends to see a patient when needed.
Reflecting on what he will miss the most he says is the interactions he has with patients that come in needing help and him being able to figure out the best way to alleviate their challenges.
“I liked figuring when patients came in with toothaches or problems, you know, figuring it out and, and helping them out, get them out of pain and, and usually we get a good result and they're happy and I'm happy,” he said.
As a strategy to ease into retirement, he started cutting back, only working a couple days per week. Now, he says he’s ready, and thankful for everyone who came to sit in his dentist’s chair and trust him.
Our Town Reno reporting by Aimee Arellano
Reno’s New Six Wards Separate Incumbents, while Mayor Says “Hunger Games” Era Begins
“Surprise, surprise, the staff-directed process under the direction of the City Manager [Doug Thornley] who reports to the incumbents don’t match any incumbents up against each other. Surprise, surprise,” council member Jenny Brekhus said drily Wednesday as a final map with six wards for Reno elections moved closer to being adopted for good in September.
“The fingerprints of staff doing work for the incumbents … that’s what I see,” she alleged.
Appointed member Kathleen Taylor lives in the new Ward 1, while the also appointed for sudden replacement purposes Miguel Martinez stays in the new Ward 3. At-large council member Devon Reese, first appointed and then elected, lives in the forthcoming Ward 5.
Council member Naomi Duerr, who stays in Ward 2, called it an “elegant solution.”
Reese said it was “not correct” that it had staff-driven “fingerprints,” calling the drawn out process consultant and community driven.
The new map called Map E passed 5-2 with Ward 4 representative Megan Ebert joining Brekhus in voting no.
Ebert reiterated disappointment her ward would be losing its only community center, Evelyn Mount, and will only have five out of 83 of the city’s parks. With the new map, Ward 4 loses areas around UNR, which have lots of progressive voters.
Ward 6 in south Reno will have no incumbents, making that the most open ended race in the next cycle.
Wards 1, 3, 5 and 6 will all be up for election in the 2024 cycle, with Ebert and Duerr staying on in their redrawn wards until 2026.
At the previous City Council meeting, Duerr had asked for several modifications in Ward 2 which she obtained. Brekhus called those additional changes “distasteful,” “playing around with people … like monopoly pieces” and a “callous way to do redistricting.”
The City of Reno released this summary: “Council voted to amend Title 1, Chapter 1.02.010, of Reno Municipal Code titled "Ward Boundaries and Official city map," to change the City of Reno ward boundaries and create a sixth ward on the Official City Map as required by Reno City Charter. Council chose Map Option E as the next official map for Reno. According to the Charter, the City is required to transition from five to six wards in 2024. Staff and the City’s independent data analytics consultant completed a comprehensive community engagement process between June-July 2023 to draft several ward map options for Council discussion and deliberation. Council must vote on these ward boundaries choice for a second time at the next City Council Meeting on September 13, 2023 for the map to become official.”
Mayor Hillary Schieve had previously wanted to keep the at-large seat but her efforts failed in Carson City during the last legislative session to reverse a prior change to go to six wards.
Schieve said there would be a new era of what she called “hunger games,” with representatives advocating solely for their own wards, with “different parts of the city up against each other.”
“You can’t cry over spilled milk,” she also said. “Let’s all move forward together.”
Our Town Reno reporting, August 2023
Mary, "Kicked Out of Cares Campus," Trying to Find a Roommate
I’m Miss Mary. I’m from San Francisco, California. Born and raised. I came up here in 1992 with my husband, who was actually a junkie, a door kicker and a pill bender.
In San Francisco, there’s bad influences, bad neighborhoods, and you just kind of walk into it. However, what saved me was always working legitimately. I used to work as a dietary aid at a care center and as a bar cleaner.
When we came here we stayed at a hotel called Pat's Place. And that used to be a strip bar.
I'm in transition now. I have savings tucked away. I'm trying to find a reliable roommate, which is, you know, it's a bit hard, and it’s like 1200 a month just for a room, you know? It's kind of ridiculous.
I like being independent by myself, but like I said, I’m trying to find a reliable roommate. It's not too easy, you know what I'm saying?
I have had addiction issues [myself]. I got rid of almost all kinds of drugs now, [but] I have a little alcohol, but not to excess, just to get rid of the tremors. It's a vicious cycle, addiction issues, you know, and a lot of us are going through it. Some keep it to themselves, but I want to shout it out …
My husband died on morphine, and alcohol poisoning. He was a junkie, you know, an opiate user.
In 1993, when we first came up here, he didn't have a chance. I was lucky. I kept working, so that's what saved me. But, the coroner came to my office. They called me down the office and said my husband passed at 2:00 PM. It was kind of shocking, but that's when you're a junkie or a drug user that you're walking down the line of death. And we all know that, but we still wanna feel better. Medication, pharmaceuticals, you know, somebody always takes something to feel better. I wish I could be free of that and just be normal without medication. And a lot of us are going through that.
I started getting into drugs when I was 13 years old.
And then I had suicide [attempt], slit my wrists, slit my throat, suicidal ideations. I don't know where that came from. It's just stuck on stupid, you know. And then being affiliated with just bad influences in San Francisco, we thought we were gonna go to Colorado, but then when we came here, a new methadone clinic opened, you know, that's the opioid to get you off the heroin. So we stuck here. He only lasted a year up here. I was with him like eight years.
Every morning I used to have to give him CPR 'cause he was a little greedy with the alcohol and meth, you know.
We actually got married up here in Reno. We were going to go to Colorado thinking that they would change our lives and get us clean. But like I said, the methadone clinic opened and then we got stuck and he died a year later.
I never had children. And living the drug life, you don't want to involve children with that anyway. You know, it wouldn't be fair to the child. So no children.
My father was from Russia, and my mom was from London, England. He had a job over in London and met my mom. Had my sister, Doreen, then they went to San Francisco 'cause he caught a job at the San Francisco Water Department. He studied eight years in Siberia to work in the water department, measuring water. I mean, water's very important to all of us. So very proud of him. Mom was a happy, happy go lucky English woman. Always happy, always cracking up. We had lots of company, good company, bad company. And it's just the influences of wherever we're living. Especially in San Francisco. I haven't been back in 30, 40 years. I have no idea how it is now.
My sister was totally straight. A student. Not into drugs or anything like that, but we lost touch. I haven't seen her in 30, 40 years. I've been looking for her through Instagram. She might've remarried and changed her name. I heard she was in Tahoe, Pacifica, Connecticut. You know, it's like, where's my sister? I really miss my sister Doreen, two years older than me.
I have just a handful of friends here. Not too many. You know, someone you can really trust. Yeah. Or not trust, you know, are they friends or frenemies, you know? You often wonder are they with you?
I used to catch fish in the Truckee River, but there’s no fish in there anymore. I see people with fishing poles, but they don't get lucky, you know.
Now that I'm retired, I don't have working anymore, that's why I'm being alcoholic lately because I get bored. Not enough to do. I'm thinking about going back to work. Should I volunteer? It’s hard to work if you don't get paid, you know what I'm saying?
I don't carry around too much. I don't need much. Just the clothes on my back, which I change every now and then.
You won't believe this, but I am banned from all the casinos and the Cares Campus 'cause this stupid said that I hit a security guard. What? So they banned me for life. So I can't go to the Cares Campus.
But I have enough money tucked away to get my own place.
I don't mind paying rent. I've always never not paid rent except for now. And I'm banned from the Cares Campus. Like I said, I got accused of hitting a security guard. I'm almost 70 years old. He would flatten me. Why would I hit a security guard?
Right now I'm out. I have a few places, like under the railroad tracks. There's a few places where you can hide and be safe, or just stay up all night.
I spend the Social Security money I get on food, clothes, refreshments. I need some new threads. I go to Catholic Charities to get clothes or donations, you know, there are lots of resources here in Reno, which is a good thing.
In the wintertime I usually have an apartment or room to stay in. I've been through a few places.
Hotels, motels, I tried sober living but that didn't work out. You know, now that it's summer, I like staying out, listen to music.
I like being out here listening to music. I drink a little bit, which is, I don't know … I used to be on crystal meth. I used to be on all kinds of drugs and I beat that. Now I drink a little alcohol for the tremors, for a little buzz. So I feel better, but that's not good either, you know? I don't know if I can quit at all.
Interview by Aimee Arellano for Our Town Reno
Hilary Lopez, Leading the Reno Housing Authority to its 80th Birthday Amid Contemporary Challenges
With an upbringing in hardscrabble Hell’s Kitchen in New York, high level education at UNR and professional experience in Denver, Hilary Lopez is bringing her passion for affordable housing however big the mountain may be to northern Nevada, as the current executive director of the Reno Housing Authority, serving all of Washoe County.
The RHA will soon celebrate 80 years of existence in October, with numbers Lopez is proud of, even though she knows all too well the task is difficult, with hoped for projects stopped in their tracks like converting the Bonanza Inn into affordable housing, costlier construction costs, long waiting lists which are often closed due to high demand, finding landlords to work with and complicated layered financing involving competition with other similar entities.
“We serve over 9,000 Nevadans on an annual basis between our public housing, our housing choice voucher, and other housing programs,” she told Our Town Reno during a recent interview at her offices on East 9th street. “We grew from having a small amount of public housing to being able to provide 750 units of public housing to our community, as well as other expanded housing options, while administering over 2,500 housing choice vouchers and specialty vouchers for residents of our community.”
Two-thirds of its residents are seniors or persons with disabilities, with several programs geared towards them, and others for families, those fleeing domestic violence situations, former foster youth and military veterans.
In terms of most of its funding, the RHA has a federal US Department of Housing and Urban Development contract for low-income public housing and for the housing choice voucher program, formerly known as Section 8, but is independent from the federal government and doesn’t use any local tax dollars.
“Some of the misconceptions are that the Reno Housing Authority is actually attached to the city of Reno,” Lopez said. “We are our own agency.”
That came to the fore when there was disappointment that the City of Reno backed out of a previous agreement earlier this year to help the RHA fund the conversion of the former Bonanza Inn into affordable housing.
Waiting lists are another reality local residents hoping for subsidized housing have to deal with.
“So we actually have two waiting lists. We have a public housing wait list, and then we have a separate waiting list for our housing choice voucher program,” Lopez explained. “And, some families are on both of those lists right now. Both of those lists are closed. However, we are always reviewing those lists. We're always trying to process applications off of those lists as quickly as we can…. [But] one of the things that we don't want to do is just continue to extend that list so that there's really not a reasonable expectation that someone who's on it would be able to receive an offer of housing or a housing choice voucher within the next one to two years.”
Other challenges include finding new landlords ready to accept housing choice vouchers.
“One of the great things about the housing choice vouchers is that residents can use them to find housing that's close to their employment, that's close to the schools that their children go to, or other nearby amenities,” Lopez said. “We have folks that come off the wait list and receive the voucher, and it's always disappointing if they're unable within the timeframe that they've received that voucher to utilize that voucher.”
The RHA recently added a landlord liaison program to provide more assistance for landlords who might have questions or concerns and might want to be involved in the program. Lopez said new incentives were recently added. “So I encourage anyone who wants to help out their community, have some guaranteed rent, and really work with us, to contact us and, and find out more about that program,” Lopez said.
There has been progress on other fronts too, such as breaking ground on the Dick Scott Manor project on East Eighth Street, which according to Lopez “will be 12 units of permanent supportive housing, specifically targeted to extremely low and very low income or unhoused veterans in our community.”
Another current project in Sparks will provide another 15 units of affordable housing, while American Rescue Plan funding is helping to maintain current housing stock. “We’ve been fortunate and received over $45 million from the state through their Home Means Nevada initiative, which uses federal ARPA funds to help us preserve, upgrade and redevelop some of our public housing to make sure that it is available not only for our current residents, but for generations to come,” Lopez said.
There is also a strong local bond with nonprofits.
“We work with them to really help boost and bolster some of our resident service programs. Some of the unique ways that we're working with some of those partners is through our Start Smart program, for example, where we provide education on financial literacy, budgeting, employment, resume writing, et cetera, to our teens who are ages 14 to 18,” Lopez said.
“And we do this in partnership with some of the nonprofits or other for-profit agencies and banks in our area that come in and provide seminars to our students. And then as a bonus for participating in these activities, our students will receive an escrow and then they could use those escrow funds when they graduate to help with continuing education, first time expenses related to first time employment or other eligible expenses.”
Lopez encourages those frustrated by the lack of affordable housing to join the Nevada Housing Coalition, which has regular events across the state to find new solutions. She also recommends residents to talk to elected officials “to just kind of reiterate how important it is that we have affordable housing, sustainable and attainable housing for all members of our community.”
Lopez is well aware recent population growth is making matters even more pressing.
“We’re doing our best to try and bring new units to the market as quickly as possible. We know that there's a need and so we're always trying to see how we could expedite things, how we could improve on our processes,” she concluded.
Our Town Reno reporting, August 2023
Willie Puchert Puts Hat in Library Board Ring, Stresses Importance of Access
Willie Puchert is a local graphic designer and former journalist who has lived in northern Nevada for almost 40 years. While he has never been interested in running for office, Puchert has been active in progressive politics for decades, working and volunteering with city, county, and statewide campaigns.
His decision to apply for one of the open Washoe County Library Trustee positions was inspired by what he witnessed back in May at a contentious Library Board meeting. Puchert says he noticed a local Republican Party operative directing and coordinating the commenters, many of whom were hostile to the library board and staff.
Criticism of the Washoe County Library System is part of a larger national conservative movement which opposes Drag Queen Story Hour events and seeks to remove books and materials they consider to be offensive.
According to a report from the American Library Association (ALA), the surge in book bans is a result of a network of local political and advocacy groups targeting books with LGBTQ+ characters and storylines, and books involving characters of color.
These groups, including Moms for Liberty, have helped push for legislation in Texas, Florida, Oklahoma, Indiana and Idaho to regulate the availability of certain books on library shelves, while also leading efforts to defund or eliminate entire library districts.
“I applied because I am concerned with censorship and book banning and the historical precedent,” Puchert said of his own reasons to apply for a board position here.
Puchert is also troubled by the accusations of grooming and pornography lobbed at the library board and staff, reaffirming his fears that “our library system was becoming the latest flashpoint in the culture wars, just as CRT has been in the school district, and the ongoing discrimination towards members of the LGTBQ+ community.”
While the Board performs many functions important to the operation of the library system, choosing the books and materials available is not part of that role.
The Library Board of Trustees is tasked with governing operations at all the libraries in the county system and consists of five at-large members, appointed by the Washoe County Commissioners to a four-year term.
Puchert is one of over 50 applicants seeking one of the two open seats recently announced by County Commissioners following the departure of trustee Ann Medaille, and the board’s decision to not reappoint outgoing chair Amy Ghilieri to a second term.
For his part, Puchert believes that libraries are a critical source of information and entertainment, as well as a hub for local culture. He thinks that it is important to push back against the campaigns of fear and misinformation and to protect Washoe residents’ ability to access libraries and their wealth of resources.
If appointed, Puchert says he hopes to increase the number of literacy and cultural programs offered by the library. A decision on who gets appointed to the two open seats is expected soon.
For more information on the Washoe County Library System and the application process for the Board of Trustees, visit https://washoelife.washoecounty.gov/category/library-system/ .
Reporting by Andrew Zuker for Our Town Reno
Applications Flood In for Open Library Board positions, and New Bookmobile Approved Amid Tensions
Over 50 applications have been received to fill two seats for the newly contentious Washoe County Library Board, apparently delaying a vote on new trustees.
Applicant information is not yet available to the public, and more information is expected to be given when county commissioners meet again publicly on August 22nd when the vote was initially expected.
One trustee, Ann Medaille resigned in July, while commissioners voted 3-2 against reappointing board chair Amy Ghilieri to a second four-year term. The swing vote was Clara Andriola, recently appointed to her seat by Republican Governor Joe Lombardo.
The remaining three trustees are Lea Moser, Al Rogers and Frank Perez.
“I'm no longer able to continue as a member of the library board of trustees,” Medaille said in a message to library staff. “I appreciate the opportunity to serve for the past year and I wish the library and the board all the best in the future.”
Once the library board is full again, it will vote itself on its next chair, probably at its Sept. 20 meeting.
Libraries have become polarizing in the country and in Northern Nevada in recent years, with social conservatives opposing drag queen story hours, such as the ones held locally, and community members from both sides of the political divide opposing certain books made available to children.
While expressing dismay concerning her removal, Ghilieri explained that the library board does not oversee programming of events or which books the library selects but rather the overall budget, strategic planning, branch improvements and the annual evaluation of the director, currently Jeff Scott.
At the most recent mid August County Commissioners meeting, Washoe County Collection Development Manager Debi Stears “presented an overview of how library materials are curated.”
A county press release indicated “there have been only two formal challenges in recent history, that of a DVD about Scientology in 2015, and that of the book “Johnny the Walrus” this year.”
That’s a 2022 children’s picture book by conservative political commentator Matt Walsh which compares being transgender to pretending to be a walrus. It was moved from Amazon’s LGBTQ+ category to the Political and Social Commentary category and removed by Target from its online bookstore, with some commentators calling the book “hateful,” “transphobic” and “anti-transgender.”
It remains available for sale at Amazon and on the shelf at the Downtown Reno Library.
In its last meeting, the Board also accepted a $75,000 state of Nevada grant for the Washoe County Library System to buy a bookmobile. “This grant will allow the Washoe County Library System to purchase a van to be outfitted with shelving, circulating library materials, Chromebooks, and tablets to be checked out and used by Washoe County residents, particularly in rural and isolated areas,” the press release indicated.
Our Town Reno reporting, August 2023
Social Media Uproar Follows KTMB's Return of River Inn Sponsorship Money
The upcoming August 17th Raise the River fundraising event for KTMB (Keep Truckee Meadows Beautiful) at Idlewild’s Sensory Garden, which will be taking place without sponsorship money from the owners of the River Inn, is leaving some in the community angry and others confused.
This controversy was sparked when an email sent to owners Lawrence McNutt and Dana Miller indicated their $3,000 sponsor fee was being returned.
"While KTMB initially welcomed the River Inn to the fold, we felt upon further review that it was best to part ways in order to ensure the safe execution of our mission and honor healthy donor stewardship practices," Darcy Phillips, the executive director of Keep Truckee Meadows Beautiful, was quoted as writing to local television channel News 4.
Since then, there has been a deluge of social media posts and comments, from here in northern Nevada but in other parts of the country as well, opposing this decision such as a late July video by wickedwitch_ofthe_west calling KTMB “spineless.” That content creator’s TikTok, which got over 7000 hearts and 180 comments, alleged there had been pressure from board members and other donors.
When asked about this, Chris Ewing, the KTMB Communications Manager wrote back to Our Town Reno with the following message: “KTMB leadership made a decision to part ways as we didn’t feel our values aligned. Leadership is also asking staff – still managing event planning and daily organizational responsibilities – not to engage in social media commentary that is less than civil.”
One of the messages for the wickedwitch_ofthe_west TikTok came from the “Renos historic River Inn” account saying: “It has been such a long difficult journey these last few years. This means the world to us. Thank you!” The River Inn’s own prolific TikTok has been documenting the twists and turns their ownership has taken, including entanglements with the City of Reno and neighbors, some of whom are reportedly suing them over modifications they’ve already made.
Then the KTMB Facebook event posting for Raise the River was inundated with angry comments favoring the River Inn owners and seems to have since been taken down.
More recently, McNutt and Miller spoke at the Reno City Council during public comment on August 9th, but didn’t directly address the controversy. McNutt made a call for the Council to work toward supporting employment in northern Nevada, while Miller said she was ready to show people around the River Inn. She said they had been bringing “certain parts of it back to life,” and would like the city’s assistance to put a trail at their location across the river to facilitate cyclists.
Their history with the City of Reno already includes disputes over code enforcement and once receiving a cease and desist letter for advertising camping on their property while not having a license to run a campsite.
City officials have indicated they are closely looking at developments at the River Inn, with concerns in terms of any impacts to the Truckee River.
McNutt, a former stuntman turned IT entrepreneur, and Miller purchased the property, originally known as Lawton’s Hot Springs, in December 2020 for $852,000. After thriving in the early parts of the 20th century, it was then empty for decades, with a near but ultimately failed attempt to turn it into a casino resort in the 1980s.